NASA remotely reprogramming Voyager 1 also means that aliens can reprogram all of our satellites.

    • radix@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Jeff Goldblum can upload a virus to take out an entire alien spacecraft. Probes are a piece of cake.

        • PoopingCough@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Actually in ID4 there was an explanation. Basically all of humanity’s computer tech came from reverse engineering alien tech. So our computers worked with theirs because they were based on theirs. Maybe this isn’t this best logic, but they did at least have an in universe explanation.

  • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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    2 months ago

    the existence of viruses and zero day exploits probably also means aliens can reprogram your mom’s laptop but why would they want to?

  • Muscar@discuss.online
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    2 months ago

    Did you fall in the shower and hit your head before thinking this? It’s so incredibly dumb on multiple levels.

    Voyager 1 isn’t even outside our solar system yet, at the moment of writing this it’s close to 15,200,000,000 miles from our sun, that’s 0.0026 light years.

    the closest star to ours is Proxima Centauri, about 4.2 light years away, part of a triple star system called Alpha Centauri. It would take Voyager 1 over 16,000 years to reach it if it was going there, which it’s not. The first “close” (1.6 light-years) flyby of a star Voyager 1 will have is of Gliese 445, which is 17.1 light years away from us, in 40,000 years.

    You seem to think that other stars are right at the edge of our solar system or something, that’s the only thing I can come up with that makes your post make any sense. Just because Voyager 1 is far away from us doesn’t mean it’s close to anything else. It has barely moved in astronomical distances, we will continue to be the closest thing to it for another 20,000 years.

    • vatlark@lemmy.worldM
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      2 months ago

      You have a lot of great things to offer this conversation, I’m not sure why all the aggression was needed.

  • Kbobabob@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    This is assuming that they would know and understand the code. Also, that nothing is encrypted but I guess encryption can be broken.

  • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    2 months ago

    Aliens would need to understand the systems.

    I mean… Can you reprogram Voyager 1? We have a bunch of random polyhedrons from the ancient world and we don’t even know what the hell they are. Our stuff could be so ancient compared to an alien that they are just as baffled by it as we are of those polyhedrons.

    They might not even be able to understand the simple pictorial instructions for playing the audio on the golden record Voyager carries.

    • Laurentide@pawb.social
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      2 months ago

      There’s a novel titled Glasshouse, by Charles Stross, where members of a far future civilization sign up to live in a simulated mid-20th century town. At one point the protagonist disassembles a flashlight and discovers that it’s just a flashlight-shaped case containing a small wormhole whose other end is in close orbit around a star. No one knew how to make an LED or incandescent bulb, or understood enough about early electronic components to hook one up to a switch and a battery. It was easier to make a wormhole generator and stick it in a metal tube.